A Tie Goes to the....

The political world watched the proceedings at Blair House looking for
theatre: instead, a policy fight broke out. This time, both sides came
armored, and there was no referee. It was a wash -- and the tie goes to
the Republicans.

The key question on the table was not whether Democrats and
Republicans could come up with ways to compromise; it was whether the
White House could move public opinion in a way that helps Nancy Pelosi
get the votes she needs to pass the Senate bill in the House. That's
unlikely.

Dick Durbin, the Senate's number two, even made a point of hinting to
reporters midway through that the Senate was ready to pass health care
legislation under reconciliation rules, which avoids the 60-vote
threshold.

Indeed, Republicans were successful when the focus of the debate
was on process -- the details of the deals that Democrats and the White
House struck with key states and the (seeming) lack of transparency.
The Democrats have an answer to this: if you want to find a pure debate
on a pure bill, you'll have to look to...another universe entirely,
because this is how legislation gets done.